MoD simply means a modification to an object or thing e.g (computer and android applications) typically for the purpose of individualizing or enhancing the performance of that thing. In simple words, mod means cracking.

Of course, modded apps and games do give you unlimited access to that particular app or game. You have access to everything you want in the app or game like let's say, you have permission and rights over all features of that app or game just like a pro user.For instance, in a modded game, you have the access to unlimited coins, weapons, armor, life and other features which games do offer. So interesting you wouldn't have to fail missions if it's an action game and also interesting you wouldn't be defeated in your football game anymore.

On rooted devices, all modded apps do work and are capable of doing many things completely. What I mean, is that modded apps do go well with rooted devices. Only few of the modded apps can yield to assent on non-rooted devices.

In spite of this, you can't find modded apps or games on Google Play Store, but you can find almost all in Google. You might ask why modded apps are not accepted on the Google Play Store. The answers to that question is because some hackers do get access to people's devices via some of those modded apps. And again 60% of modded applications are fake.

Yea, Google offers us with results on almost all things we search for in it, because it's swift, steady and strong, and also much users who are making use of it daily.

Alas! not all apps and games we search for on Google are good and real. Much of it are fake especially modded apps and games. But don't you think now is the time to get an immediate access to any modded app and games you want and free yourself stress of searching on Google which can lead you to waste much of your data on downloading the fakes of it.

Nevertheless, I did some research and I thereby found and got a way of downloading modded games directly with no form of stress.

Seems I have bored you with so much words. I wouldn't like to delay you again, so let's just dig it in and let you in on the knowledge of how to download modded apps and games easily.

HOW TO DOWNLOAD MODDED APPS AND GAMES VIA ABLOTA HACK STORE PRO:

Description Of Ablota App:

Ablota Hack Store Pro offers you up-to-date modifications for apps and games. An easy to understand overview will display you all available apps and games. The installation is easy and fast. Once signed-up, you can choose to receive update notifications and latest news.

★ After installation, launch the app and accept it's terms and conditions.

★ That done, on HOME you'll be shown some few apps and you will also be given some tutorial. Nevertheless, if you wish to skip, you can.

★ On ACCOUNT, you'll see how many points/coins you've got. To earn more free points, you have to keep on inviting peeps. To free yourself that stress, you can buy points using your own money by tapping on Store.

★ To view all available modded apps and games, tap on HACKS.

★ Tap on any of the games which you want to download. The points, version, and date, month, and year of last update of that app or game will be shown to you. Also the modded features of that app or game will be shown to you.

★ Now click on the blue download button below and then a pop-up will appear, signifying if you certainly want to purchase or download that app or game for the particular amount of points shown. Tap OK if you have enough points for it.

★ Your email address will be requested. Write it down and then click on SUBMIT.

★ The download link of that app or game is immediately sent to your email account. If you cant find it among your primary emails, check it out in the SPAM mail folder.

★ Then click on the red download button below the email message and it will then redirect you to the official website where you're to download.

All social media networks has long introduced a feature that let's you see/know who had read your messages and also at what time they read it. This is usually called aread receipt.

Of course, this is a very useful feature, as you'll have a knowledge of knowing those friends of yours who ignored replying your messages and those who haven't seen the message yet.

But on the other hand, this means that anybody on the receiving end of a message, can no longer pretend not to have read the received message if they have checked it already. Now getting to read that message, you do feel forced to reply, even if you don't intend to, so it wouldn't seem as if you're ignoring the sender.Nevertheless, if you'd rather not to immediately reply that message or not to reply at all and also not letting your friend know you've read his/her message, there's this intelligent miniature tool that do help out.

This tool is called Unseen - No Last Seen. This app blocks the social media network read receipts from been sent. If you don't want others to know that you're reading their messages, then Unseen is made for you. Recover back your privacy on social media networks with this awesome app. You now have all the freedom to read your friend's messages without leaving any blue double tick check.How Does This App Work?Once downloaded and installed in your device, you grant the app permission to access your social media accounts (apps), your messages and also contacts. Once this is done, any messages coming into any of your social media accounts gets intercepted by the Unseen app. What I mean here, is that such messages goes to the Unseen app also. So with this, you go to the Unseen app, you read the message there without your contact or friend's knowing you'd read it. This app is awesome and works for WhatsApp, Facebook, Telegram, and Viber.

Where Can I Download This App?

Try out this app and you'll be sure to like it. And well if you do not fancy this app, I have a trick which I personally use sometimes. What I do is that whenever I receive messages from some friends, I do off my network data first to read, then get it on after reading, and it do also be like I never read that message. Sounds funny huh? I think you should also try it lol.

Hi! Thanks for sticking around. I don’t write about
blogging often because this is a travel website not a blogging website,
but I’ve seen a lot of articles on travel blogging lately, which have
many points I disagree with, and I want to offer a counterbalance to
some of the prevailing wisdom out there.
Travel blogging is a
crowded field — and it gets more crowded by the day. After all, the idea
of “getting paid to travel the world” seems like an amazing thing to
try to do. You get to visit wonderful places around the world on someone
else’s dime! It’s a dream job, right?
Well, first, running a blog is really hard and time-consuming. Putting posts up is not
going to result in money falling like rain (though judging by some of
the people I’ve seen on paid trips, it can amount to a drizzle). You
have to work for it. It takes persistence. Unless you hit the Internet
“viral” lottery, you should expect to plug away for a least a year with
minimal success.
Think
of travel blogging like the restaurant business: Just because there are
a lot of restaurants doesn’t mean that that they are all good or that
you shouldn’t open one of your own! Instead, people who open a
restaurant or desire to be a world-class chef look around and say, “I
can do this better.” That’s the mindset you should have about your travel blog.
Just
because you travel and write doesn’t mean you can write well or can
become a good travel writer. Go back to my early posts from 2008 — they
are horrible. I mean god-awful. There is a big difference between the
content I produced then and the content I produce now. Sucking — at
first — is part of the journey. You aren’t going to be great out of the
gate.
But how do you quicken the curve to greatness? Here are nine
things you MUST do to succeed in travel blogging (or any blogging
field, really):

1. Read a Lot

I am always shocked at how
few travel bloggers develop their skills by reading. Very few read any
marketing, strategy, business, or self-development books. Running a blog
is running a business, and if you don’t go to “school” and
constantly learn, you’re going to fall behind. Every successful person I
know is a voracious reader. They constantly try to improve their skills
and knowledge. You must always be student. You must always learn.
After all, why reinvent the wheel?
Read
what experts have to say, learn what works, and apply the tips you pick
up to your blog. If someone has been there and done that, why try to
learn that through trial and constant error? Read the best way to do it…
and do it! I read a lot besides travel books.
I consume marketing books, management, writing, history books, and
biographies. Even if you only get one idea from the book, that book was
worth it. I read at least one book a week and am often reading multiple
books at a time. Travel, history, business, fiction — I consume it all.
If you only do one thing from this list, make it this one.
Some of my must-reads are:

2. Be Like Apple — Think Different

Whatever
you are going to write about, try to present that subject in a way that
hasn’t been done before. If everyone is sharing sponsored content,
don’t. If everyone is writing text, make a video. If everyone is
serious, be funny. If everyone has complex designs, go simple and
visual. If everyone is doing one-off blog posts, create a story through a
series of posts that keep people coming back for more.
Always innovate — do something different and unique.

3. Invest in Your Blog

For
a long time, I avoided spending any money on this website. I
bootstrapped everything and viewed every expense negatively. “That
designer would be nice but I can’t afford it. I’ll just create a
crappier design myself.”
But I soon realized money spent wisely is
an investment. Now I pay for designers, SEO auditors, conferences,
video and audio editors, copy editors, and much more. This allows me to
improve the reader experience, develop useful products, work on other
projects, and free up time to write. I focus on my core competencies and
hire the rest out.
It’s easy to say, “Oh, that conference is too
much. I don’t want to spend that much.” But if that conference results
in one strong business connection that leads to new sales or a guest
posting opportunity, then the conference is worth it. (See below for
some good conferences to attend.)
Businesses invest in themselves —
and you need to do the same. It can be easy for me to say now, but even
when you start, spending a little bit of money can go a long way. I
didn’t start out hiring lots of people. I hired one person, then
another, then another. Even if you spend a few hundred dollars on
snazzier banners, that can go a long way to improving your readers’
experience.

4. Be Niche

Back when I started blogging in
2008, it was easy to maintain a general budget travel website. You could
cover a wide range of travel topics and face little competition. There
was only a handful of bloggers. Now, there are too many long-established
blogs and websites to do that. (And you’d also be way behind in Google
search results.)
I recommend being as narrow and focused in your
topic(s) as possible. Whether it’s RV travel, Turkey, Thailand, NYC, or
your small town, the power of search lets everyone define their niche
and still be able to reach millions of potential readers. In fact, being
niche now is better than trying to be a more general resource site like
mine.
Moreover, focusing lets you become an expert. You can be
the person to whom readers always turn for information on this subject
or that destination, which allows you to cultivate a bigger presence
online.
Don’t try to be everything to everyone. Go narrow. Go deep.

5. Create Products

Businesses
sell something — and so should you. Whether it’s a course, a book,
t-shirts, tours, or just other people’s products via affiliate
marketing, give your audience an opportunity to support your website.
Offering products for sale allows you to be independent from sponsors
and brand deals and not compete with other travel bloggers for spots on
press trips (see below). It allows you to scale your website and your
revenue. Many products offer value to your readers by going more
in-depth and in detail than a blog post usually allows.
There are
few travel bloggers that produce products. Most of the time, travel
bloggers end up making money by creating sponsored content and getting
paid to go on trips. That’s cool if that is something you want to do,
but that is time-consuming and requires you to be constantly working
(and it’s soul-sucking). You never have time to relax or do something
for yourself. It’s not a hamster wheel you want to be tied to.
Products allow you to generate something once and earn revenue while sleeping, sightseeing, or getting a suntan on a beach!

6. Don’t Take a Lot of Press Trips or “Work with Brands”

Why do people still buy guidebooks? Because they want an independent
opinion on destinations. If everything you write is sponsored by
someone, you’ll hit a limit to your number of readers. Sure, some people
won’t care and will follow your adventures no matter what, but a larger
majority of people will feel that you can’t relate to their experience
and will seek to find information elsewhere.
Consumers want relatable and independent travel content because they want to learn that they can make it happen too. (Just look at the comments on this post
if you don’t believe me!) If you’re in fashion, you can showcase all
the makeup you want because a reader can look at that and think, “Yeah, I
can do that too! To the mall I go!” But when you’re talking travel,
people can’t look at your free, multi-thousand-dollar trip to the
Maldives and say, “Yeah, that’s realistic for me too! To Expedia I go!”
Think
about it. When you see someone having a $10,000 holiday, how do you
feel? Do you think “Wow! That’s pretty!” or “Wow! I can do that too! I’m
going to book that!?”
Sponsored trips, blog posts, and one off
brand deals will help you travel and provide eye candy for your readers
but it won’t create the expertise and relatable experiences that will
have them coming back to you over and over for concrete advice or
product purchases.
I’ve yet to see a pure travel blog get huge by
only taking sponsored trips (though there are number of fashion/travel
hybrid blogs that are gigantic). The most successful bloggers in many
niches avoid one-off partnerships and sponsored content because it
dilutes their authenticity. (On the other hand, long-term partnerships are wonderful as they can bring value and unique deals to your readers.)
Avoid too many one-off trips paid by someone else, write about relatable experiences, and grow larger!
(And when you create products, you don’t need the money from these trips! Win-win!)

7. Network Outside of Travel

Networking with other travel bloggers can help you become better known in the industry (which is a good thing), but by reaching outside of the industry, you can be the travel person everyone else turns to for quotes, interviews, and advice.
And
that is going to pay more dividends than just sticking to travel
conferences. Yes, attend industry events (you’d be stupid not to!) but
don’t attend only industry events.
Find where your
expertise overlaps with other industries and meet the successful leaders
in those industries. Then you can find people who know nothing about
travel and be their travel expert on their websites. It’s how
I’ve connected with so many finance, entrepreneurship, and tech experts.
Here are some good conferences to attend:

8. Stop Talking About Yourself

While
running a blog means you are going to say “I” a lot more than in
magazine or newspaper writing, that doesn’t mean you should write only
about yourself. If your blog is solely a journal or trip down memory
lane, write about anything you want. But if you’re looking to run a
professional blog that creates a sustainable business, remember that
it’s not all about you. It is – and always will be – about the people reading your website.
Whether
that is by providing practical advice, telling them a good story, or
making them laugh, remember that it’s all about how you can be in
service to them.
If you are going to write about yourself, do so
sparingly or relate it to the bigger picture of travel on the road.
Don’t write about your new shoes, what food you ate, your thoughts on
whatever, or the mundane details about your life. Few people really care
about that. We read writers because they connect with us on an
emotional level, tell good stories, and allow us to visualize ourselves
in the places they talk about it.
Far too many travel blogs are a
glorified personal diary but the most successful ones tell stories of
places and better their reader’s travel experience!

9. Be Persistent

Rome
wasn’t built in a day — and your blog won’t build itself overnight
either. Maintain realistic expectations about your blog. Don’t expect
anything but hard work for the first year. Don’t rush. Build something
that will last. The light is always at the end of the tunnel, but too
many people give up right before the end. Keep going. You’ll make it!

****

Creating
a travel blog is a time-consuming process. Writing about your trip to
Paris is only a small part of the story. Successful blogs focus on
content and are customer-centered and reader-centered. It’s easy to
reach small or mid-tier status but if you want to stand out, focus on
reader-centric content, being niche, creating products, and sticking to
best practices.If you’re looking for more in depth
advice, I have a very detailed and robust blogging course that gives you
a behind the scenes look at this website and features case studies,
expert interviews, monthly webinars, tech support and help with setting
up your website, and a lot more.

If
you’re like me, you probably use Google many times a day. But chances
are, unless you're a technology geek, you probably still use Google in
its simplest form. If your current use of Google is limited to typing in
a few words and changing your query until you find what you’re looking
for, then I’m here to tell you that there’s a better way -- and it’s not
hard to learn.
On the other hand, even if you are a technology geek and can
use Google like the best of them already, I still suggest you bookmark
this article of advanced Google search tips. Then, you’ll then have the
tips on hand when you're ready to pull your hair out in frustration
watching a neophyte repeatedly type in basic queries in a desperate
attempt to find something.

The following advanced Google search tips are based on my own
experience and things that I actually find useful. I’ve kept the
descriptions of the search tips intentionally terse, as you’re likely to
grasp most of these simply by looking at the example from Google
anyway.
Here's an overview of some of the most useful Google search tricks. You'll be an expert Google search-er in no time.

How to Search on Google

1. Explicit Phrase

Let's say you're searching on Google for content about inbound marketing. Instead of just typing inbound marketing into
the Google search box, you will likely be better off searching
explicitly for the phrase. To do this, simply enclose the search phrase
within double quotes.

Example Search:"inbound marketing"

2. Exclude Words

Let's say you want to search for content about inbound marketing, but you want to exclude any results that contain the term advertising. To do this, simply use the - sign in front of the word you want to exclude.

Example Search: inbound marketing -advertising

3. This OR That

By default, when you conduct a search, Google will include all the
terms specified in the search. If you're looking for any one of one or
more terms to match, then you can use the OR operator. (Note: The OR has
to be capitalized).

Example Search: inbound marketing OR advertising

4. Words in the Text

If you want to find a webpage where all the terms you're searching
for appear in the text of that page (but not necessarily beside each
other), type in allintext: followed immediately by words or phrases.

Example Search: allintext:vermont ski house lake

5. Words in the Text + Title, URL etc.

If you want to find a webpage where one term appears in the text of
that page and another term appears elsewhere on the page, like the title
or URL, then type in that first term followed by intext: followed immediately by the other term.

Example Search: neil diamond intext:red sox

6. Words in the Title

Want to find a webpage with certain words contained in the title (but not necessarily beside each other)? Type in allintitle: followed immediately by words or phrases.

Example Search: allintitle:wine club

7. Words in the TItle + Text, URL, etc.

Want to find a webpage where one term appears in the title of that
page and another term appears elsewhere on the page, like in the text or
the URL? Type in that first term followed by intitle: immediately followed by the other term.

Example Search: flu shot intitle:advice

8. Words in the URL

If you want to find pages with your search query mentioned in the URL, type allinurl: immediately followed by your search query.

Example Search: allinurl:hubspot blog

9. How to Search Within a Website

Often, you want to search a specific website for content
that matches a certain phrase. Even if the site doesn’t support a
built-in search feature, you can use Google to search the site for your
term. Simply use the site:somesite.com modifier.

Example Search: site:www.smallbusinesshub.com "inbound marketing"

10. Related Search

If you want to find new websites with similar content to a website you already know of, use the related:somesite.com modifier.

Example Search: related:visual.ly

11. A Page That Links to Another Page

Let's say you want to search for every website that cites a BuzzFeedarticle on their website. To do this, use the link: command,
immediately followed by the name of a page. Google will give you all
pages that link to BuzzFeed's official website. The more specific the
URL is, the fewer, more pointed results you'll get.

Example Search: link:buzzfeed

12. Similar Words and Synonyms

Let’s say you want to include a word in your search, but also want to
include results that contain similar words or synonyms. To do this, use
the ~ in front of the word.

Example Search: "inbound marketing" ~professional

13. Word Definitions

If you need to quickly look up the definition of a word or phrase, simply use the define: command. You can listen to the word's pronunciation by pressing the megaphone icon.

Search Example: define:plethora

14. Missing Words

Ever forgotten a word or two from a specific phrase, song lyric, movie quote, or something else? You can use an asterisk* as a wildcard, which can help you find the missing word in a phrase.

Example Search: much * about nothing

15. News in a Specific Location

If you're looking for news related to a specific location, you can use the location: command to search Google News for stories coming from that location.

Search Example: star wars location:london

16. Specific Document Types

If you’re looking to find results that are of a specific type, you can use the modifier filetype:. For example, you might want to find only PowerPoint presentations related to inbound marketing.

Example Search: "inbound marketing" filetype:ppt

17. Translations

Want to translate a simple word or phrase from one language to another? No need to go to a translation website. Just search translate [word] to [language].

Example Search: translate krankenwagen to english

18. Phone Listing

Let’s say someone calls you on your mobile number, and you don’t know
who it is. If all you have is a phone number, you can look it up on
Google using the phonebook feature.

Example Search: phonebook:617-555-1212

(Note: The number in this example doesn't work. You’ll have to use a real number to get any results.)

19. Area Code Lookup

If all you need to do is to look up the area code for a phone number,
just enter the three-digit area code and Google will tell you where
it’s from.

Example Search: 617

20. Zip Code Lookup

If you need to look up the zip code for an address, simply search for
the rest of the address, including town or city name and state,
province, or country. It'll return results with an area code (if
applicable),

Example Search: 25 First St., Cambridge, MA

21. Numeric Ranges

This is a rarely used but highly useful tip. Let’s say you want to
find results that contain any of a range of numbers. You can do this by
using the X..Y modifier (in case this is hard to read, what’s between
the X and Y are two periods). This type of search is useful for years
(as shown below), prices, or anywhere where you want to provide a series
of numbers.

Example Search: president 1940..1950

22. Stock (Ticker Symbol)

Just enter a valid ticker symbol as your search term, and Google will
give you the current financials and a quick thumbnail chart for the
stock.

Example Search: GOOG

23. Calculator

The next time you need to do a quick calculation, instead of bringing
up the Calculator applet, you can just type your expression into
Google.

Search Example: 48512 * 1.02

24. Tip Calculator

Along with a normal calculator, Google has a built-in tip calculator. Just search tip calculator and you can adjust the bill, tip %, and number of people splitting it.

Search Example: tip calculator

25. Timer

Don't have a timer handy? Google has you covered. Just type in an
amount of time + the word "timer," and the countdown will begin
automatically
Search Example:

Search Example: 20 min timer

26. Stopwatch

Search "stopwatch" and it'll bring up a stopwatch for you to start when you're ready.

Search Example: stopwatch

27. Weather

Next time you're looking for quick weather stats or a forecast for a certain area, search for weather followed by a location. Google will give you both before the first search results.

Search Example: weather cambridge ma

28. Sunrise & Sunset Times

If you're curious when the sun will rise and set that day at a specific location, do a simple Google search with the word sunrise or sunset along with the location name.

Search Example: sunrise acadia

29. Flight Statuses

If you type in the airline and airplane number into Google, it will
tell you the flight information, status, and other helpful information.

Search Example: BA 181

30. Sports Scores & Schedules

Want to know the latest sports scores and future schedules of your
favorite teams or match-ups? Search a single team name or two team names
and Google will use Google Sports to spit out scores and schedules
before the first search results.

Search Example: manchester united

31. Comparing Food

Believe it or not, if you're ever curious how two types of (fairly
generic) foods compare with one another, you can do a quick Google
search to see how they differ in calories, fat, protein, cholesterol,
sodium, potassium, and other nutrients.

A Brief History of Search & SEO

Written by 9JATECHUPDATES-OFFICIAL

@9JATECHUPDATES

Tracing
the history of SEO is kind of like trying to trace the history of the
handshake. We all know it exists, and we know it’s an important part of
business. But we don’t spend a ton of time thinking about its origins --
we’re mostly concerned with how we use it day-to-day.
But unlike the handshake, SEO is fairly young, and changes
frequently. Quite appropriately, it appears to be a millennial -- its
birth is predicted to fall somewhere around 1991.
And in its relatively short life, it’s matured and evolved rather quickly -- just look at how many changes Google’s algorithm alone has gone through.

So where did SEO begin, and how did it become so darn important? Join
us, as we step back in time and try to figure this out -- as it turns
out, it’s quite a story.

But First, a Look Back at Search Engines

The first idea for creating a common archive for all the world’s data
came to fruition in 1945. That July, Dr. Vannevar Bush -- then director
of the now-defunct Office of Scientific Research and Development --
published a piece in The Atlantic
proposing a “collection of data and observations, the extraction of
parallel material from the existing record, and the final insertion of
new material into the general body of the common record.” In other
words, we believe, today’s Google.
Several decades later, in 1990, McGill University student Alan Emtage
created Archie, which some say was the very first search engine --
though that remains up for debate, according to research
from Bill Slawski, president and founder of SEO by the Sea. However,
Archie was what Slawski called the “best way to find information from
other servers around the internet at the time,” and is actually still
(very primitive) operation.
The next decade saw several pivotal developments, with the more commercial versions of search engines we might recognize today taking shape.

February 1993: Six Stanford students create Architext, which would later become the search engine Excite. Some, like Search Engine Land
(SEL), say that Excite “revolutionized how information was cataloged,”
making it easier to find information “by sorting results based on
keywords found within content and backend optimization.”

December 1993: At least three “bot-fed” search engines exist -- JumpStation, RBSE spider
and World Wide Web Worm -- which likely means they were powered by web
robots to crawl both servers and site content to produce results.

It’s worth noting that nearly twelve years later, in June 2009, Microsoft released Bing -- its previous editions were also known as Live Search, Windows Live Search, and MSN Search.
But here’s where SEO itself comes in. As search engines became more
mainstream and widely used, site owners started to get wise. As SEO
community Moz
puts it, “It was discovered that by taking some rather simple actions,
search engine results could be manipulated and money could be made from
the internet.”
Those results, though, weren’t exactly quality ones. And that, dear readers, is where the SEO story begins.

A Brief History of Search & SEO

The ‘90s

With search engines becoming household names and more families
becoming connected to the Internet, finding information came with
greater ease. The problem, as noted above, was the quality of that
information.
While search engine results matched words from user queries, it was
usually limited to just that, as an overwhelming amount of site owners
took to keyword stuffing -- repeating keywords over and over again in
the text -- to improve rankings (for which there was no criteria), drive
traffic to their pages and produce attractive numbers for potential
advertisers.
There was also a bit of collusion going on. In addition to the keyword stuffing, people were using excessive and “spammy backlinks,”
according to SEL, to improve their authorities. Not only were there no
ranking criteria at the time -- but by the time search engines fixed
algorithms accordingly, there were already new black hat SEO practices taking place that the fixes didn’t address.

But then, two kids at Stanford got an idea.

When Page and Brin set out to create Google, that was one of the
problems they wanted to solve. In 1998, the pair published a paper at
Stanford titled “The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search
Engine,” where they wrote:

...the predominant business model for commercial search engines is
advertising. The goals of the advertising business model do not always
correspond to providing quality search to users.”

It was in that same paper that Page and Brin first mentioned
PageRank, the technology that Google uses to help rank search results
based on quality, and not keywords alone. Some might say that thesis
cleared the path for SEO as we know it today.

The Early 2000s

The early 2000s saw the beginning of the Google takeover. In the
process of making search engine technology less advertising-centric,
Google began to provide guidelines for white hat SEO -- the kind that
the “good guys” stick to -- to help webmasters rank without any of the
common fishy behavior from the 90s.

2000-2002

But according to Moz,
the guidelines didn’t yet have an actual impact on ranking, so people
didn’t bother following them. That’s partially because PageRank was
based on the number of inbound links to a given page -- the more of
those, the higher the ranking. But there wasn’t yet a way to measure the
authenticity of those links -- for the early part of the 2000s, Marketing Technology Blog says it was still possible to use these backlinking techniques to rank pages that weren't even related to search criteria.
But in 2001, Brin and Page appeared on "Charlie Rose," when the host
asked them, "Why does it work so well?" As part of his answer, Brin
emphasized that -- at the time -- Google was a search engine and nothing
else, and was looking at "the web as a whole, and not just which words
occur on each page." It set the tone for some of the initial major
algorithm updates that would begin to more closely examine those words.
Have a look at the full interview:

2003-2004

This approach to the web being about more than just words really
began taking shape in November 2003, with the “Florida” update to
Google’s algorithm. Enough sites lost their ranking for Search Engine Watch
to call the response to Florida a massive “outcry,” but careful to note
that many sites benefitted from the change, too. It was the first major
instance of sites receiving penalties for things like keyword stuffing, signaling Google’s emphasis on solving for the user first -- mainly with quality content.
In 2004, one of the more primitive versions of Google's voice search existed, in what the New York Times
called a half-finished experiment. And while the technology was
somewhat infantile at the time -- just check out what the instructions
looked like at first -- it was also a signal to the future importance of
mobile in SEO. (Stay tuned -- more on that later.)

2005: A big year for SEO

One of the biggest years in the search engine world was 2005. That
January, Google united with Yahoo and MSN for the Nofollow Attribute,
which was created in part to decrease the amount of spammy links and comments on websites,
especially blogs. Then, in June, Google debuted personalized search,
which used someone’s search and browsing history to make results more
relevant.
That November, Google Analytics launched, which is still used today
to measure traffic and campaign ROI. Check out its baby photo:

2009: SEO shakeups

In 2009, the search engine world saw a bit of a shakeup. Bing
premiered that June, with Microsoft aggressively marketing it as the
search engine that would produce noticeably better results than Google. But as SEL predicted, it was no “Google-killer,” nor did its advice for optimizing content
significantly contrast Google’s. In fact, according to Search Engine
Journal, the only noticeable difference was Bing’s tendency to give
priority to keywords in URLs, as well as favoring capitalized words and
“pages from large sites.”
That same year, in August, Google provided a preview of the Caffeine
algorithm change, requesting the public’s help to test the “next-generation infrastructure” that Moz says was “designed to speed crawling, expand the index, and integrate indexation and ranking in nearly real-time.”
Caffeine wasn’t fully introduced until nearly a year later -- when it
also improved the search engine’s speed -- but in December of 2009, a
tangible real-time search was released, with Google search results
including things like tweets and breaking news. It was a move that
confirmed SEO wasn’t just for webmasters anymore -- from that moment
forward, journalists, web copywriters and even social community managers
would have to optimize content for search engines.
Here's Matt Cutts, Google's head of webspam, discussing Caffeine in August 2009:

2010-Present

When you’re typing in a search query into Google, it’s kind of fun to
see what its suggestions are. That’s thanks to the Google Instant
technology, which rolled out in September 2010. At first, Moz says, it
made SEOs “combust,” until they realized that it didn’t really have any
result on ranking.
But Google Instant, along with the evolution of SEO from 2010 on, was
just another phase of the search engine’s mission to solve for the user
-- despite some controversy along the way around pages whose rankings were actually improved by negative online reviews. The algorithm, Google said, was eventually adjusted to penalize sites using such tactics.
More on Google Instant, circa 2010:

That year also saw a growing importance of social media content in
SEO. In December 2010, both Google and Bing added "social signals,"
which first displayed any written Facebook posts, for example, from your
own network that matched your query. But it also began to give PageRank to Twitter profiles that were linked to with some frequency. The importance of Twitter in SEO didn't end there -- stay tuned.

2011: The year of the panda

The trend of punishing sites for unfairly gaming Google’s algorithm
would continue. Some of these incidents were more public than others,
including one with Overstock.com in 2011. At the time, according to Wall Street Journal,
domains ending with .edu generally had a higher authority in Google’s
eyes. Overstock used that to its advantage by asking educational
institutions to link to its site -- and use keywords like “vacuum
cleaners” and “bunk beds” -- offering discounts for students and faculty
in return. Those inbound links would improve Overstock’s rankings for
queries with such keywords, until Overstock discontinued the practice in
2011 and Google penalizing them soon after.
It was also the year of Panda, which first rolled out that February
-- the algorithm update that cracked down on content farms. Those were
sites with huge quantities of frequently updated, low-quality content
that was written with the sole purpose of driving search engine results.
They also tend to have a high ad-to-content ratios, which Panda was
trained to sniff out.
Panda itself has undergone several updates -- so many that in its timeline of changes to Google’s algorithm, Moz
declined to list any that weren’t major after 2011. Even with that
exclusion, the timeline still lists twenty-eight panda updates -- for
most of which the impact was difficult to measure -- through July of
2015.

2012: Along came a penguin

In April 2012, Google took what it called “another step to reward
high-quality sites” with the first of many Penguin updates -- and, in
the process of announcing it, acknowledged Bing’s month-earlier blog
post on the changing face of SEO.
Penguin targeted sites that more subtly used non-white hat SEO tactics;
for example, those with content that might be mostly informative, but
was also sprinkled with spammy hyperlinks that had nothing to do with
the page’s H1, like in this example:

It's worth noting that 2012 also saw a throwback to Google's original
anti-ad-heavy thesis with the "Above The Fold" update, which began to lower the rankings of sites with heavy ad-space above the "fold," or the top half of the page.
Eventually, Google would go beyond targeting spammy content itself.
The Payday Loan algorithm update -- which was hinted at in June 2013 and
officially rolled out the following May -- actually focused more on
queries that were more likely to produce spammy results. Those were
typically searches for things like, well, payday loans, and other things
that might make your mother blush. Google adjusted its ranking system
to help keep spam out of those results, and while it didn’t necessarily
impact the SEO efforts of legitimate sites, it displayed efforts to keep
search results authentic.

Google goes local

Keeping with the tradition of animal-named algorithm updates, Google released "Pigeon" (dubbed so by SEL)
in 2014, which carried quite an impact on local search results. At the
time, it seems to have been designed to improve Maps queries, which
began to be treated with some of the same technology that was applied to
its other search functions, like "Knowledge Graph, spelling correction, synonyms". Local searches were going to become a big deal -- and it will only continue to do so, as you'll see in a bit.

Then, in 2015...

The biggest post-2010 SEO announcement might have been Google’s
mobile update of April 2015, when non-mobile-friendly websites would
start getting lower rankings. That meant SEO was no longer about
keywords and content -- responsive design mattered, too.
Google announced that change in advance, in February 2015, with a mobile-friendly test
that allowed webmasters to view potential issues and make changes
before the rollout. It wasn’t the last of Google’s mobile updates -- in
August 2016, it announced a crackdown on mobile pop-ups.

What’s Next?

It might be hard to believe, but it looks like even more change is on the horizon.

Going local

But that brings up the issue of localization in SEO, and optimizing
results to be regionally relevant. That’s especially true in the realm
of voice search -- Yelp and other business aggregators are used to
answer voice queries about what’s nearby, for example. That’s an SEO
opportunity for local businesses, by making sure their listings are “comprehensive, accurate and optimized to be referenced” on a third party site.

Getting Social

While the 2009 introduction of Google's real-time search had some
social ramifications, social media is becoming a more pivotal piece of
SEO strategy. When the search engine began indexing tweets in 2011, for
example, it hinted toward a future in which users seek information on
social media in the same way that they do via search. In fact, this
indexing might be Google's version of future-proofing -- if you can
imagine it -- for a time when people no longer use search engines the
way we do now.
For example, type in the name of any celebrity -- say, Charlie Rose,
whose video we shared earlier. The first page of search results for his
name includes his Facebook and Twitter profiles. Plus, check out the
biographical sidebar to the right -- there are social icons with links
to his various networks there, too. When users search for a person,
that's one of the first things they want to see.

In any case, it’s clear why SEO has become a full-time job. Its
history will only continue evolving. Executing it well requires a high
level of skill, ethics, and upkeep on technology.
But we know that, sometimes, it’s not possible to have a single
person dedicated to it, which is why we continue to create the best SEO
learning resources we can. Check out some of our favorites:

What are your favorite pieces of SEO history? Let us know in the comments.

You can speed up some slow and old iPhones by replacing their batteries.
Apple shocked everyone by admitting that as iPhones grow older, iOS
slows down its CPU to avoid random shutdowns.

That’s right, your iPhone actually “throttles” its CPU depending on how
degraded the battery is, making it run slower than it was originally
designed to. All batteries in all electronic devices degrade over time.
Even if you take good care of them, they will just degrade slower.

Unfortunately, your iPhone won’t warn you that its performance is being
slowed down, so you won’t necessarily know for sure when it’s time to
replace the battery. However, you can see if your phone is affected with
an app called Geekbench.

If you’ve tried everything else and you have an iPhone that’s over a
year or two old, it may be time to replace the battery. If you have
AppleCare+, the battery replacement might be free. If not, an official
battery replacement through Apple will cost $79, but that’s a lot
cheaper than buying a new iPhone.

No, Closing Open Apps Won’t Help

We think it’s also important to dispel a widespread myth here: contrary
to popular belief, “clearing your RAM” and closing open apps won’t do
much of anything for general performance (though it can help fix an
individual stuck app). In fact, closing all your apps regularly will
force all your apps to start from scratch every time you open them,
which will make things take longer—and drain more battery—not go faster.

Hopefully these tips will give you some improvements when it comes to giving your old iOS devices a new lease on life.

When
you get a new hard disk, you have to format it before it can receive
data but what is the meaning of formatting, or what happens when you
format a disk ? When you format a partition using the GUI or the
"format" command or the good old Fdisk Windows will create a file system which means the disk is ready to accept data.

This file system is just a table which is called FAT (File Allocation
Table) or NTFS (New Technology File System). This table will contain
names and addresses of files stored on the disk. In other words, every
file that you save, will have its exact location (physical address) on
the hard disk. So when you save or place any file in the disk, Windows
will create some numbers representing the sectors (very small parts of
the disk) in which the file reside then place those numbers in the file
system table. Then when you double click to open a certain file, Windows
will take the file name then check the table to see the numbers
(addresses) of the sectors where the file is located on the hard drive
and then it Windows() directs the #head of the hard disk to move to
those sectors and read their contents , after that the file opens.

When you delete a file, Windows removes the numbers (the address of the
file) from the the file system table. That means , the deleted file is
technically there on the hard disk but it's location is not known. The
icon (not the contents) representing the file will be placed in Recycle
Bin. The reference of the file is removed from the table but the file
itself is there hiding somewhere on the disk. The sectors the file
occupies will be marked as free (free space) that's why other new files
can occupy those sectors.

When you use a recovery software, the software will bring the numbers
back and put them in the table making the file accessible again. When
you delete all files and re-format the disk then you will have
"permanently" lost the files because the entire table will be gone. but
even after formatting, there are some advanced tools that can #recreate
the table with all its contents thus recovering all the data.